AGjOlSniL 3 Disposing of XVooil A.lie.. If there is no receptacle for wood ashes the best thing to do with them is to broadcast them around the trees. Ashes contain both lime and potash with a small proportion of phosphor ic acid, and they benefit all kinds of trees, showing excellent effects for several years. To Tell the ARB of ERRR, According to good authority a new laid egg placed in brine made in the proportion of two ounces of salt to one pint of water, will at once sink to the bottom. An egg one day old will sink below the surface, but not to the bot tom, while one three days old will swim just immersed. If more than three day 3 old the egg will float on. the surface, the amount of shell exposed increasing with age, and if two weeks only, only a little of the shell will dip in the liquid. A Plow-toil. When shallow plowing, at the same depth is continued for a series of years, if it is a clay soil, a solid plowsoil will be made that is to a greater or loss degree, impenetrable to roots. Plowing should always be as deep as the soil will permit, and there is a signal advantage in loosen ing up the subsoil of clay lands with a subsoiler. It is not wholly uncom mon to find a farmer raising good crops on heav-y clay soil, while his neighbor, with the same kind of soil, and with similar cultivation, raises poor crops. The difference is often the result of the different depth of plow ing. The successful crop grower plows as deeply as the soil will allow; the other man has been plowing shal low until he has made a packed sub soil of a portion of his fertile soil. The latter Is a method that wastes fertility. Turn up all the good soil, unless it js several feet in depth as you find in some of the far western states and oven in some portions of Minnesota. —J. W. Scott, in the Epito mist Crowing Apple. Sneco.fully, Good apple trees can be grown on almost any rich soil, but one rich in potash is best suited for fruit grow ing. If time were no object I would prefer to grow my trees from the seed. Get pomace from the cider mill, wash out the seeds and dry them. About cne peck of seed can he secured from 100 bushels of pomaco. Prepare a plot thoroughly and sow about 25 seeds to the running foot, having previously soaked them in warm water. When the trees are two or three years old, graft or bud with tho varieties de sired. Grafting seems to be most pop ular, but I prefer budding. When the trees are five years old, they are ready to set in the orchard. For the first few years but little pruning is necessary, the aim being to produce a tree that will head near the ground. Such trees hear earliest and are most easily picked. Give the young trees frequent, shallow cultivation. 1 like to turn hogs in the orchard. Trees seem to thrive under these conditions. If near a good market early apples arc the most profitable. Grow those with good flavor ol' fair size and fine ap pearance. Get the treos to bearing while young, as old trees are not prof itable. Watch for the borer. In my opinion It make little differ ence whether the treos are produced in the north or south. After the bloom is secured tho character of the blos som determines largely the character of the fruit. If the blossoms arc open and tho stamens prominent fertilza tion Is much more likely to occur. Trees which produce closed blossoms are of little value. Pick and pack winter apples tightly in barrels. They seem to keep best when put up In this way. I know an orchard which last year paid the owner $122 per acre.— J. J. Blackwell, in Amorican Agricul turist now to Yuril rowlK. Never shut up a flock of fowls In a small inclosure, thinking you will get any good returns from them. A dozen fowls should have at least a yard 100 feet square. The yard or yards may bo more convenient by malting them narrow and longer, according to cir cumstances. Use two-Inch mesh poul try netting, four feet wide, with a board at the bottom, hut none at the top. This bottom board or hoards, is better two feet high, and thus pre vents tho males from fighting through the wire, but any width board is bet ter than none at all, for with it you can better stretch the wire, and make a better job of fencing. It is not nec essary to use a higher fence, or wire more than four feet, but no hoard must be used on tcp or the fowls will fly up on the top hoard and get out. If a chance bird gets over this fence, crop her wings by cutting only tho long stiff flight feathers from the last joint of wing. If possible when making yards en close all the shade trees you can get in them. If trees are not already in them, loose no time putting them there. A mulberry thicket of tho Rus sian variety Is the Ideal tree for fowls, as the fowls love the leaves and the immense crop of berries they bear. We have a mulberry hedge through our yards and the low branches spread out near the ground 10 feet or more, and the leaves are stripped up by the fowls and the shade is perfection. It Is true that the poultry yard is a good place for fruit trees and fruit, but we can also have as many fruit trees In it as it will accommodato, beside the mulberries. To have these yards arranged Just right we should have a large enclos ure adjoining well set down In clover, or grass of any kind, alfalfa clover be ing the best, or bokhara clover, which I think Is equally as good, ,and thus let out each flock on this grass run every day a while. Fowls will do fully as well In every respect and In deed better, when thus properly yard ed, than if running at large. The egg output is largely increased by yard ing properly.—A. H. Duff, in Farm, Field and Fireside. Use Lime in the Fall. The fall season is believed to be the best for using lime. Every farmer understands that lime gives good re sults, but the action of lime in the soil differs according to the texture of the soil and the amount of mineral and organic matter contained. Dime is considered an alkali, and therefore keeps the soil sweet by neutralizing acids which arise from the decay of animal and vegetable matter In the soil. Mr. A. Peets, In England, who has done much to attiact attention to the use of lime, slates that lime, by keeping the soil sweet, enables the germs in the soil, both those which convert humus into ammonia and those which convert ammonia into ni tric acid, to carry on the work whicn cannot be done in a sour soil. The carbonic acid being the product of the existence of the bacteria, it is as in jurious to the existence of their well being as the Impurities of a vitiated atmosphere are to the well being of the high types of animals. When ni tric acid is formed by the nitrifying germs in the soil it unltos with the lime to form nitrate of lime when oth erwise it would be given off into the air. In the same way lime serves to preserve in the soil the soluble phos phates by converting them Into water soluble and citrate soluble phosphates. Also, the potash, by converting it into carbonate of potash, both of which valuable plant foods would be lost to a certain extent by drainage. A ju dicious application of lime also de stroys many insect pests, which hiber nate in the soil. Lime, in Its dry state is very friable, aud serves to disinte grate city lands in much the same way as burnt earth, thus being of assist ance in rendering the soil lighter. No matter how fertile the soil may be, one of the main advantages in using lime is that it fits the soil for the work of the organisms which derive nitrogen from the atmosphere, which explains, to a certain extent, why lime benefits clover and other leguminous plants. Though not. regarded as entitled to a place in the list of available fertil izers, yet lime is a plant food, exisf ing in nearly all soils, and is found in the ash of nearly all plants. In the soil it sets free and renders avail able other plant foods, also serving to store up f"od n ate'ii.l in the soil and prevent Its loss by washing away. No soil can be considered well manured with economy unless there is a suffi ciency of lime present to get a maxi mum of efficiency out of the manure. It is claimed that there should be at least one-half percent of lime present in any soil or one part in two hun dred. To test for lime put some of the soil in an ordinary tumbler or test tube, pour In a little water and stir well, and then pour in a little muri atic acid. It it effervesces freely the soil contains sufficient lime, but if ef fervescence is feeble, or is not appar ent, the soil requires lime. When lime is applied it should be in a very fine condition, air slaked, and should bo distributed evenly by broadcasting over the surface of the soil. There are implements made for performing such work. The tendency of lime Is to go down into the soil; hence it is not necessary to work it in with a har row. It should not be left in piles in the fields, if it can be avoided, as it may prove injurious on locations where it is heaped. From 10 to 40 bushels of air slaked lime are used per acre, the quantity depending upon the soil and conditions, a larger proportion being used when the lime Is applied at the time of plowing under a green manurial crop. As lime is slow In its efTect on most soils, the benefits derived from its usa .may not be apparent for months, for which reason it Is broadcasted in the fall so as to allow as much time as possible for it to remain in the soil, the land being plowed In the spring. It gives excellent rosults when used with green manurial crops, being used on the plowed ground when the crop is turned under, but as the soil may lose some of its soluble plant food dur ing the winter if lelt uncovered, It Is the practice with some to sow ryo on the plowed ground, turning the rye under early in the spring. Gas lime Is also sometimes used, but being sul phide and sulphite of iirae, and being very different from air slaked lime it does not give the same results, and may prove injurious if used in very large quantities.. Gas lime does not assist nitrification, and is not there fore as valable as may be .supposed, though It Is a powerful Insecticide. It Is not necessary to apply lime every year. Some soils require only an oc casional application. If applied every year the quantity should be small, not exceeding 10 bushels per acre, and even then it should not be used every year on the same land except when a green crop is plowed under, the lime then assisting to neutralize the acids ir, the soil. Lime Is not a substitute for manures or fertilizers; In fact. If lime Is used there Is all the more need for manure or fertilizer, as the advan tage held by lime over the fertilizer salts is Its chemical and mechanical effect on the soil. It gives good re sults wherever used, Is cheap compared with Its real value, and should be used by a larger number of farmers.—Phil adelphia Record. PEARLS Or THOJGHT. No fuel, no fire. While there's hope there's life. Simplicity is the sign of serious ness. The use of the arrow depends on the aim. Nothing is more profitable than preparation. The shadow may be the price we pay for the sunshine. When ability meets opportunity the road of duty is plain. Your promotion cannot be meas ured by your locomotion. It takes the hammer of practice to drive in the nails of precept. The best things will be but stuff to the man who only seeks the stuff. He who is only passively willing to do right will find himself actively wishing to do wrong. The majesty of a man cannot be measured till he is seen standing in a magnificent minority.—Ram's Horn. WATER PURIFIED BY OZONE. AIOHCOW'I* Successful Plan for Keeping Down Infectious Disease (ioriiiH. A new method of sterilizing a city's water supply is being successfully op erated in Russia and it was described at the annual meeting of the Ameri can Association of Water Works En gineers recently held here, in a pa per forwarded by Nicholas Siinin, chief engineer of the city of Moscow, where the system has been adopted and ac cording to M. Simin is universally commended. The plan is to sterilize the water by the introduction ot ozonized air and it is contended on its behalf that it destroys all the bacteria in the water and makes it at comparatively small cost absolutely sate for drinking pur poses. So far, the system has not been adopted outside Russia, but M. Simin contends that in this country condi tions are more favorable than any where else for its adoption, and lie advocates its introduction here as tending to solve all problems in regard to contaminated water supplies. The system is based upon the prin ciples that ozone burns all organic matter with which it comes in con tact in water, including bacteria and their vital products, that with water which has been freed previously of suspended matter the destruction of the bacteria is equally efficient, no matter how great may be the num ber, and that the pathogenic bacteria are among the first to be destroyed. The purification of the water in this way is simply a development of and an improvement upon the ordinary aeration of water by means of atmos pheric air. The air, before coming in contact with the water, is subjected to a series of electrical discharges which convert the oxygen from dia tomic oxygen to totratomic oxygen, which is ozone and Is remarkable for its power of oxidizing organic matter including the bacteria in water. The cost is put at $6.25 for each million gallons, or in large plants even less. Extensive experiments In the sys tem have been made in France, Ger many, Holland and Belgium. The necessary removal of suspended mat ter is accomplished by using a small quantity of coagulant for mero clari fication. M. Simin says: Ozonization oxidizes not only the bacteria, but all organic matter. The water is ren dered colorless, sparkling and odor less. It has an agreable and refresn ing taste and there is introduced into it no foreign matter except oxygen, which of course, is beneficial.—New York Sun. Tlio Home or Minna. Discoveries in Crete seem likely rather to add to than detract from the mythical value of the stories of Minos, the law-giver, of the bull headed Minotaur, of the 20 youths and virgins of Athens, of Ariadne and her bail of twine and of the hero Theseus who penetrated into the Labyrinth and slew the monster. In stead of being local variants of uni versal sun-myths, it is possible that all these persons lived and did much as the poets and story-tellers say. For the past two years Arthur J. Evans, an Englishman, who is at the head of the Cretan exploration fund, has been working on the site of ancient Knossos, and all that he has yet found is curiously corroborative of the an cient myths and legends. He has laid bare evidences of a civilization Infinitely superior to that which ex isted at the same time on the Greek mainland. He has found relics of painting and sculpture which are far in advance of contemporary art in Egypt, and can be equalled only by that of the Periclean age which came 10 centuries later. He has discovered that linear writing was known and practised 700 years earlier than the first known historic writings. He has found evidences of a luxury and re finement which were at least equal to those of Egypt and Assyria at their most flowery periods; and all these things in the fabled Labyrinth, the House of the Double Axe, the Palaco of Minos.—New York Commercial Ad vertiser. "Can Do" Will Not Do. Out of all the men of the First Chi nese regiment—we trust it will also be the very last—that went to tho front in north China, not more than 200 returned to Wei-hai-wel. Few casualties occurred among them, but the large majority of the rank and file, who had devoted themselves most Industriously to the collection of loot simply deserted with this spoil. We regard this attempt to make soldiers out of the "can do" Chinese coolie as an experiment, and we earnestly advo cate its early abandonment—Hong kong Press. MOTTOES OF STATES. HoiT Koine Phrases Decaine the Slogans of Various Localities. If you desire to have fun with a learned acquaintance ask him simple questions about -hiß country, its his tory, financial condition, political 711- visions, geographical lines, climatolo gy, topography, etc. Questions that any schoolboy can answer Dr. Know all will stumble clumsily over, often getting a bad fall. There is one ques tion that I have never heard any one answer, namely, "What are the mot toe, 1 of the several states of the Un ion and their meaning?" A clever man may name that of his own state and guess at those of three or four of the more important sister states, but he is unlikely to know the mean ings of any that are in the original Latin. Try some able professor in a crowd and see him flounder. Ask the professor if he knows that the great seal of the United States was designed by an Englishman, Sir John Prestwich, who also suggested the motto, "E Pluribus Unum?" Our ablest men had failed to propose any thing acceptable. Franklin, Jefferson, Adams, Lovell, Scott, Houston and others wasting nearly four years on the task. Franklin proposed Moses dividing the Red Sea with this mot to, "Rebellion to Tyrants is Obedience to God"; Adams proposed the choice of Hercules and Jefferson the children of Israel in the wilderness. Doesn't it seem funny? Some of the suggest ed mottoes were "Bello vel Pace" (In War or Peace), "Semper" (Forever), "Deo Favente" (With God's Favor), "Virtus Sola Invicta" (Virtue Alone Invincible,), etc. After six years the Englishman's device was adopted, and it yet remains on the arms of the United States. If the professor Is familiar with the obverse of the great seal, ask him what he has to say of the reverse, and the chances are 100 to 1 that he cannot recollect the unfinished pyra mid, the eye in the triangle, the glory proper, the motto over the eye, "An nuitt Coeptis" (God Has Favored the Undertaking), and that under all "No vus Ordo Seculorum" (A New Series of Ages). The obverse of the great seal, with its splendid eagle, the 13 stripes, the 13 stars, the glory Creak ing from the clouds and the "E Pluri bus Unum," is magnificently Ameri can, but the pyramid, the desert, the forbidding Egyptian sky and the eye in the triangle on the reverse are sim ply barbarous. The great seal of tho confederacy by a strange arbitrament of fate was never used. It was made in England and reached Richmond about the timo of its evacuation by the armies of the lost cause and the confederate gov ernment. Its motto was "Deo Vin dice" (God Maintains). The seal is a handsome silver die about three inches in diameter, bearing an eques trian portrait of Washington (after the portrait in Richmond), surround ed with' a wreath composed of cot ton, tobacco, sugar cane, corn, wheat and rice—the principal product of the confederate states. It cost in England about SGOO, with press, wafers, seal papers, wax, silk cords, etc. It was presented to the state of South Caro lina about 1887 and is kept in the office of the socrtary of state. Ask the professor if he remembers that Minnesota, founded by Ameri cans, is the only state in the Union that has a French motto. The one originally selected and ordered en graved was Latin, but the die was spoiled and the French substitute was adopted, "L'Etoile du Nord" (The Star of the North). Does the pro'/es sor recall that Montana is the only state with a Spanish motto? Strange that fur traders should have adopted "Oro y Plata" (Gold and Silver). If you say that one state has a Greek motto ho probably will do some pret ty hard thinking before answering that it is California. "Eureka" is he licved to be Greek for "I have found." Tho only Italian motto belongs to Ma ryland, anil it originally belonged to the Calvert family, "Patti Maschi. Pa role Femine" fDeeds Are Males, Words Females). To be a trifle plainer, Manly Deeds, Womanly Words." Ask The professor if he knows that Wash ington is the only state with an In dian motto, "Al-Kl" is pure Chinook for "by and by," in the future or here after.—Philadelphia Times. now r.ife Motion Pictures Aro Jtq.lt. Lift-motion pictures are made with one type of camera and projected by two kinds of machines, says Roy Mc- Ardle In Everynody's Magazine. The moving-picture camera is arranged so that when turned by a crank, either by hand or by an electric motor, the sensitized film passes behind tho lens at a rate of 320 feet per minute. Rut to make each picture, this film must come to a dead stop for one-seventieth part of a second, during which time the shutter of the camera opens and closes. Then in less that the hun dredth part of a second the film moves down about two Inches, and the pro cess Is repeated until the picture is finished. From one-half a minute to a minute is sufficient time to take or dinary scenes in life motion; 500 or (100 men marching eight abreast can pass at a walk a given point In one minute; and so, in taking life-motion photographs of a parade, the operator of the camera turns on his machine only at the moment important, per sonages are passing. Pictures three minutes In lengtn or longer are often taken, hut expericnee has shown that long pictures on the biograph grow tiresome. British rivers and canals carry 35,- 000.000 tons of merchandise a year, those of France 25,000,000, and of Germany 9,000,000 Church Tower Out of Plumb. It is not generally known that Vien-' na possesses a church with a leaning j tower. This ancient edifice at Ober St. Velt was included in 1840 In the ! Vienna Bishopric. It was burned down by the Turks in 1529, rebuilt in j 1660, and again destroyed by the i Turks in ICS3. In 1742 the rebuilding i of the church was once more under- | taken, and was completed in three , years. The new tower, owing to some ! defect in the construction, leans to wards His Majesty's Thiergarten, al though the droop is not observable from the high road. Borneo in Line for Naval Honors. The remote monarchy in Borneo known as Sarawak, the ruler of which is a Rajah and *a nephew of the Eng lishman who rescued the territory from barbarism, has a little navy of its own. It is made up of two gun boats of 175 and 118 tons respectively, of low speed, and each armed with two guns. 'J he Absence of It. If there is any truth in the saying that hap piness is the absence of all pain, mental and physical, the enjoyment of it can only be i found in heaven. But so far as the physical is concerned, It is within easy reach ; at least measurably so, as far &a cure will go. The sum of human misery in this line is mndo up of greater or lose degrees of physical suffering. The minor aches and pains which afflict man kind are eoey to reach and as easily cured. Thero are none in the whole category, which, if taken in timo, cannot bo cured. They must in some form afflict the norvos, the bones, the muscles and joints of the human body. They arc all more or legs hurtful and wasteful to tlio system. St. Jacobs Oil is made to cure them, to search out hidden pain spots, and to euro promptly in a true remedial and lasting way. "Very, very many have not known hap pinoos for years till they used It, and very manj arc putting off cure and happiness be cause they don't uso it. The annual expenditure of the Mexican Government to-day i 3 three times what it was thirty years ago. Rest I'or Hie II owe In. No matter what ails you, headache U, a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. CASCAKETH help nature, cure you without a gripe'or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your hoolth'back. CAS CARETH Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. Eighty thousand cats are yearly export ed from Great Britain. The total number on those islands is estimated at 7.000.00 C *lOll llstvnrrt. 8100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to horn that tliero is at least ono dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is takon inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy ing the foundation of tho disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing it 3 work. The proprietors havo BO much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY A Co., Toledo, O. Sold bv Druggists, 75c. Ilall's Family Pills are the best. People in the West End of London are spending much money this year on exter nal floral decorations for their houses. FITS permanently curod. No iits or nervous* ' noss after first day's uso of Dr. Kline's Great | Nerve Restorer. £2 trial bottle and treatise froa I Dr. B. H. KLINE, Ltd.. 031 Arch St.. Phila. Pa. There's more m a clock than appears on the face of it. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teothing, soften tho gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 250 a bottle British exports to the Cape and Natal increased thirty-four per cent, last year lamsurePiso's Cure for Consumption save! my life three years ago.—Mas. THOMAS ROB* BINS, Maple St., Nor virh, X.V.. Feb. 17, L'JJJ. There are over 200,000 acres of unculti vated oyster land in Long Island Sound. s<■><) TO 1500 A VEAk We wsnt intelligent Men and Women ns Traveling Representatives cr Local Managers; salary S9OO to fivo n year and nil expenses, according to experience and ability. We also want local represent stives : salary #9 to fijj a week and commission, depending upon the lime fccvoted. Send Kiatnp lor full particulars auj late position preferrd. Address, Dept. 11. TRJt WRT.t. COMPANY. Philadelphia, Ta. * „ DUKES mm ALL ELSE MS. 5 m nest !,; Hook for Ifii 'n SX p the Household, teaching ns it does jttf I MjSjgl VPf // U>e ensily-distingiushe.l Hyniutmns H KpTwl A) , of 'lilter.iut Dieenses, the Cnuru, ill! rP'tt'fa •)?■--- V 4. fi and Means of Frvventiiu such Dig. ill lyiliX wfi'di ""I! n? Remedies 1 fcW 008 paces, M r>iss- „ PROFUbELY ILLUSTRATED. 0) . The Book is written m pla : n every (lll \C A fl-FI,;:( fl-FI,;:( English, and is free from the l! IT-- teohnicsiUerms wlueh render most iji """" trctiernlity of rea lei's. This Book is i! iOn in ten. led to lie of Service in the ffl r ly/ I I fKLUN>'./,r readily understood by all. Only I ' ll GO CTS. POST-PAID. •• Or/ere and Jfler ratifim." (I'he low price only lieinn made j| possible by the immenso elitfou print? li. Not omy d'ws tins Boot contain so 1 much Information Relative to Diseases, but very properly gives a Complete " Analysis of everything pertaining to Courtshin, Marri igo an I the Production 0 anil Rearing of Healthy Families; together with Valuable Recipe* an I l'iv- Y scription.s. Explanations of Botanical Practice, Correct use of Ordinary Herbs. New E. nru vo| n-.| I nt sen i at. OhCO for thi* vuhnhle volume. ONLY CO CICNTS POST-PAID. Sen.l postal I notes or postage r-tainos of ntiv denomination n>t arg> r man 5 cents, j BOOK P J3LUHIMC H 134 Loonard Street, N. Y. Cltv. An Incomplete Hoiisf. "We run wild over tho furnishings of a hou§e| fts furniture, carpets, hangings, pictures and mask and always forget or neglect the most important rcqnisite. Something there should be always on tho sholf to provide agaimt sud den casualties or attacks of pain. Such coma like a thief in tho night; a sprain, strain, sudden backache, toothacho or neuralgic at tack. Thoro is nothing easier to get than a bottle of St. Jacob* Oil, and nothing surer to cure quiokly any form of pain. The house is incomplete without it. Complete it with • good supply. The diamond if laid in the sun and then carried into a dark room shows dis tinct phosphorescence. Since 1850 the population of France has increased but 3,800,000. Putnam FADELESS Dyes do not stain ths hands or spot tho kettle. Sold by all drug gists. "When it comes to matrimony," saya the cynical bachelor, "it seems as though no man ever gets old enough to know bet ter." | Poorly? | 3 " For two years I suffered tcr- B rifely from dyspepsia, with great B depression, and was always feeling I poorly. I then tried Ayer's Sarsa- K pari 11 a, and in one week I was a I new man." —John McDonald, I Philadelphia, Pa. Don't forget that it's "Ayer's" Sarsaparilla § that will make you strong | and hopeful. Don't waste | your time and money by jj t trying some other kind. 1 | Use the old, tested, tried, | * and true Ayer's Sarsapa-1 rilla. £I.OO a bottle. All linguists. || Auk your doctor vrhnt lio thinks of Ayer's g Sarsaparilla. Ko knows sll about this grand a old family iviodbine. Follow his advice aud M wo will bo satisfied. 9 J. C. AYEn Co., Lorrcll, Mass. fl Constipation Does your head ache ? Pain back of your eyes ? Bad taste in your mouth"? It's your liver! Ayer's Pills arc liver pills. They cure consti pation, headache, dyspepsia. 2Ec. Ail draj-lsts. ( Wnnt your moustache or board u I brown or rich black? Then use THE. BjFRT mtimmamm m THE. WORLD j //■,//, / BEARS THIS TRADE MARK /.Tf /T. MA DC IN SLACK ORVDDLCAV /%#;! /A mi viTv-- ON SALE EVERYWHERE CATAW3UBPBtt SHOWING* FULL LINE OP /J( > GARtIENTS AND HATJ. S A.J.TOffSB CO.,BOSTON NAMvje "Tlip -an re *bat maite tYeat Point rnmnne.tf McILHEfiNY'S TABASCOi DROPSY OHPBH. BomK of taatinionialn and lOilnia* tieatmraft tree. Dr. H. It. OKEEN 8 B0: